"Casino Royale" is really good and Daniel Craig as the new Bond
is the best Bond in a very long time. Ever since it was announced that
Craig would take on the title role, critics have slammed the choice, relished
reports that he couldn't drive the Aston Martin car, and Craig himself
had to bear terrible injuries. But it makes it all worthwhile in the end.
The film goes back to the drawing board and traces the way Bond invents
himself. He has just been given the "00" status and is too
trigger-happy piling on the causalities. He is also raw psychologically
and has to mature. Bond has to put his ego in place, learn to respect
women and win battles with more character than strength.
The movie by Martin Campbell, who also directed Pierce Brosnan in "Goldeneye",
is dramatically streamlined. There are no expensive explosions or nifty
gadgets - just great action sequences.
Atypical of it's predecessors, this movie's action sequences consists
of the enemy being drowned in the washbasin, choked in a hotel stairwell
or just being chased through a construction site - one of the most simple
but exhilarating action sequences of any Bond movie.
This movie, in many ways, is the antithesis of the Bond archetype.
Apart from the simpler action sequences, there are no one-liners, sexual
innuendos and hi-tech gadgets.
It takes Bond almost half way into the movie to put on his tuxedo.
Before this, he walks around in ordinary looking but comfortable street
clothes that accentuate Craig's physique and prominent biceps.
The penultimate fight between the hero and villain is settled over
a game of poker at the Casino Royale and the winner is determined through
a test of character and not physical strength.
In the most revealing
line of the uniqueness of this movie, a bartender when taking the order
of martini asks Bond, "Shaken or stirred?" and Bond spits
back at him, "Do I look like I give a damn?"
The supporting actors compliment the look and feel of the film. French
actress Eva Green is stunning but also brings in a great touch of coolness
and vulnerability. She, unlike other Bond girls, is more intellectual
and natural. Her scenes with Craig are subtle yet intense and their
sexual chemistry radiates throughout.
The villain Le Chiffre is played by Mads Mikkelsen who has blood for
tears and unlike other Bond villains does not care about power or running
the world but wants money instead.
Craig is also the first Bond to hurt and bleed properly. He stands
in front of the bathroom mirror taking in the pain and needing a scotch
to numb the pain. His scars remain the next day and the movie shows
the time they take to heal.
As an actor, Craig brings in a lot more pure acting skills and athletic
prowess. The film strives to be more rooted in reality than the glossy,
fantasy world of the earlier Bond movies.
"Casino Royale" introduces us to the spy who we thought we
knew all about but instead reveals a rough-edged man with no refinement,
prone to violence and vulnerable enough to fall desperately in love.
This is Bond inventing himself. And it is great that we have Craig to
show us how he does it.